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Plenty-Today4117 t1_ixc7glt wrote

Something like this has never happened to me before or since, and this was 4-5 years ago. My cat was near the glass wall. Then I turned around. When I turned back it was on the other side of the glass wall wanting to get back inside. There was no way it could get outside without me opening the door for it, but I did not open the door.

Also the glass wall was not horizontal to my viewpoint, so I could not confuse the cat being on the other side of it. The wall was edge side to me, so I saw the cat on the right where there was carpet and furniture, when I looked back it was outside on the left on concrete. It was broad daylight.

If I had experiences where I lost time and forgot doing things. I would have crashed my car years ago. I have not done that.

Eye witness accounts are good enough for a court of law. If someone says they saw a crime, the lawyers don't automatically question their sanity, unless the witness has a history of it. If the law did that, very few criminals would ever be convicted. This is outside your experience, so you think its crazy. That's okay. Its a normal reaction.

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mootcat t1_ixcfc7j wrote

Our minds are extremely fallible. Eyewitness accounts are historically terrible and weighed very little in court.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eyewitness_testimony

I get that what you perceived felt like reality to you, but doesn't it seem a bit extreme to assume that very laws of the universe are what glitched and not your own biology?

People hallucinate, misunderstand, misremember and have any number of faults in their perception everyday.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_memory

To you what you experienced is reality and that's totally fine. In the same way someone with a different neurology might see or hear something that I could not. That does not make that experience true at large.

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BenjaminHamnett t1_ixd327m wrote

I’ve mis seen things. People hallucinate and survive their bad driving.

It’s more likely we’re in a properly functioning simulation and this dude mis saw something than for this to be proof that the sim malfunctioned

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Plenty-Today4117 t1_ixeqwyn wrote

*Some* people hallucinate. I don't do recreational drugs, nor do I take prescribed drugs, nor does anyone in my family line have genetic predisposition to it. Hallucination is not something I do, but it might be something you do.

If you seriously believe what you are saying, you would not drive a car, nor cross any road, because you could be hallucinating.

Wikipedia is not a credible source. They used to fail students for using it. Its founder says its been hijacked by politically motivated people who use it to quote each other. But since you like Wikipedia so much here you go:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Why_Most_Published_Research_Findings_Are_False

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purple_hamster66 t1_ixdczu3 wrote

The people who mis-see things and crash are less likely to survive to tell you about them. In any case, claiming you saw something that wasn’t there might be enough to get your license revoked, so why would people claim this in court?

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PositiveWeapon t1_ixdo0i4 wrote

As others have said eye witness testimony is considered extremely unreliable in court. Our visual system takes up the largest area of our brain and uses a significant amount of energy. To save energy, the brain assumes a lot of things. If you were subconsciously expecting your cat to be inside, at a glance, it's entirely possible your brain put the cat there.

I'm not ruling it out, I think this is a simulation. But if there was a glitch, isn't it more likely the cat would be floating upside down or halfway through a wall or something? Given what we know about the brain it's far more likely to be an artifact of our brains energy saving feature.

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Plenty-Today4117 t1_ixemqr8 wrote

Long term memory is unreliable. There was no long term memory involved here.

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PositiveWeapon t1_ixerdki wrote

Vision is not 100% reliable.

You have a blind spot at all times. Do you notice it? No, because the brain fills it in with what it expects should be there.

https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1991-04-25-me-722-story.html

Lots of articles about the brains use of prediction to save energy, here's a random one: https://www.quantamagazine.org/to-be-energy-efficient-brains-predict-their-perceptions-20211115/

Watch some lectures on YouTube to really blow your mind. You need to understand you don't actually 'see' anything, ever. At all times you are viewing your brains reconstruction of its perception of the photons it collects. Yes, effectively the brain contains a graphics card ridiculously more sophisticated than anything we can create.

As for crossing the road, the goal is to keep you alive. You are far more likely to see something that isn't there than not see something that is there.

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Plenty-Today4117 t1_ixex85g wrote

Dude... The cat was inside. I turned around for a second, then turned back and it was outside, in a place it could not get to, unless I put it there. I was shocked to see it outside, so I went outside, picked it up, and brought it inside.

What I remember is the shock that something in the world was not in the same place that I left it. This has never happened to me before or since. This is not rocket science. The people in this thread are over thinking it.

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